quick answer at least a $1,000 (allows you to put on almost 15 modest verticals at a time). 15's kind of the magic number for that strategy to see the probabilities play out in your favor consistently. (keep in mind you kind of need to be tuned into uncorrelated underlyings for that to play out as it should---search countless tastytrade videos on that topic)Jon H. Ryan said:
What would you suggest as a minimum beginning balance?
Depends. If you are just playing with strategies and want to have a decent number of occurances so the probabilities play out more or less as they should, doing vetical spreads (safe risk defined, basic options strategy that is not real capital intensive) a thousand or so. Obviously the more the better (a few thousand) and more if you actually want to make some money. But for getting real learning with real money, that'd be the way to go. You wont make much but you wont really lose anything significant either and more valuable in that process you'll learn to trade and manage your own money.
Then when you are ready to take it to the next level and more heavily fund your account and take more advantage of selling premium and taking advantage of not just probability but time decay you'll be set. It's a beautiful thing being dead wrong on direction but winning when an underlying is going up, down or sideways. That'll take time learning wise and in being comfy getting short premium, but its the core of what I do and when you can really start generating cash in any market environment consistently.
The low fee structure of tastyworks really helps for keeping overhead low on commissions ans doing the "small and often" tastytrade method (its a key reason they went back into the brokerage side of things, so it was eaiser for retail traders to do that method without getting gouged on commissions).
But in short it doesn't need to be a lot of starting funds if you are just trying to learn by doing. You could get by with less for that purpose but i just threw out $1000 so you've got room to have a few things on.
Just stay small, and the sooner you learn to be mechanical in managing the opposite ends of fear and greed the better. Thats not all going to come from just doing safe vertical spreads but its a good start and you start getting a feel for how the options and markets move.
Tastytrade has some great segments for beginners and those with small accounts.
-Several series of Where Do I Start are great for beginners
-Tastybites segments are great for people with small accounts
-market measures are great segments in general learning, i still follow those, always loaded with great takeaways